The Philadelphia Eagles are just one week away from attempting to win their second Super Bowl title in team history. Philadelphia has been dominant throughout t
Cam Newton led the Carolina Panthers to a 15-1 record in the 2015 regular season and went on to Super Bowl 50, where they would lose to the Denver Broncos. Newton came just one game away from hoisting the Lombardi Trophy and earning a championship ring,
Cam Newton, the only MVP in Carolina Panthers history, believes his “individual success” is more important than a Super Bowl win. His 2015 season was a franchise high point, nearly leading the Panthers to a Super Bowl victory.
Former Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton gave a questionable answer about his individual awards on ESPN's First Take on Thursday. Stephen A. Smith asked Newton if he would trade his MVP for a Super Bowl championship. Clearly expecting Newton to say yes, Smith was visibly surprised when Newton answrred in the opposite.
Cam Newton has taken a pop at Jalen Hurts and the Philadelphia Eagles by questioning whether they would enjoy success in the AFC.
The quarterback only made it to one Super Bowl, a 24-10 loss to Peyton Manning’s Denver Broncos that ended the award-filled 2015 season. Newton garnered quite a bit of criticism for not diving on a fourth-quarter fumble in that game.
The former Carolina Panthers quarterback, now working as a professional opinion-haver on ESPN's "First Take," bucked conventional wisdom Thursday when asked by Stephen A. Smith if he would trade his MVP award for a Super Bowl win.
Cam Newton won the Heisman Trophy and the BCS national championship as Auburn ’s quarterback in the 2010 season. In the NFL in 2015, Newton won the league’s Most Valuable Award, but he and the Carolina Panthers lost to the Denver Broncos 24-10 in Super Bowl 50.
Cam Newton isn’t wrong. You might not like his answer, but you can’t say he’s wrong. The former NFL MVP said he’d take his Most Valuable Player award over a Super Bowl ring, and the internet, as it always does, lost its mind.
Newton said he wouldn’t give up the NFL MVP for a Super Bowl, stating that the “impact” his career had in the league was more important. To explain his point, Newton named several quarterbacks who were less-prolific than he was but ended up winning a Super Bowl.
Public opinion has turned against Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones in recent months and Rob Gronkowski thinks he knows where the blame lies for their disappointing NFL season. Jone